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Endogenous attention modulates attentional and motor interference from distractors: Evidence from behavioral and electrophysiological results

[PDF] MartinArevalo_EndogenousAttention.pdf (706.5Kb)
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10481/49772
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00132
ISSN: 1664-1078
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Autor
Martín Arévalo, Elisa; Lupiáñez Castillo, Juan; Botta, Fabiano; Chica Martínez, Ana Belén
Editorial
Frontiers Media
Materia
Distractors processing
 
Interference
 
Endogenous attention
 
Event-related potentials (ERPs)
 
Simon effect
 
Fecha
2015-02-20
Referencia bibliográfica
Martín-Arévalo, E.; et al. Endogenous attention modulates attentional and motor interference from distractors: evidence from behavioral and electrophysiological results. Frontiers in Psychology, 6: 132 (2015). [http://hdl.handle.net/10481/49772]
Patrocinador
EM-A was supported by a predoctoral grant (AP2008-02806) from the FPU program from the Spanish Ministry of Education and Science, and by a postdoctoral grant from the INSERM-U1028. Research was funded by research projects PSI2008-03595PSIC, PSI2011-22416, and eraNET- NEURON BEYONDVIS, EUI2009-04082, to JL. FB was founded by a postdoctoral grant from the eraNET- NEURON BEYONDVIS project. ABC was supported with a Ramón y Cajal fellowship from the Spanish Ministry of Education and Science (RYC-2011-09320).
Resumen
Selective visual attention enhances the processing of relevant stimuli and filters out irrelevant stimuli and/or distractors. However, irrelevant information is sometimes processed, as demonstrated by the Simon effect (Simon and Rudell, 1967). We examined whether fully irrelevant distractors (task and target-irrelevant) produce interference (measured as the Simon effect), and whether endogenous orienting modulated this interference. Despite being fully irrelevant, distractors were attentionally coded (as reflected by the distractor-related N2pc component), and interfered with the processing of the target response (as reflected by the target-related lateralized readiness potential component). Distractors’ attentional capture depended on endogenous attention, and their interference with target responses was modulated by both endogenous attention and distractor location repetition. These results demonstrate both endogenous attentional and motor modulations over the Simon effect produced by fully irrelevant distractors.
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